Description

Book Synopsis
Stories from the Field is a relatable, thoughtful, and unorthodox guide to field research in political science. It features personal stories from working political scientists: some funny, some dramatic, all fascinating and informative.

Trade Review
The breadth of life experience captured in this collection is the reason this volume has great pedagogical potential. A lot of graduate students will flip to find their academic heroes and crushes and then keep reading. Authors are writing with different agendas, but always in a first-person voice. The effect is to give the volume both intellectual heft and a personal touch. -- Jesse Driscoll, author of Doing Global Fieldwork: A Social Scientist’s Guide to Mixed-Methods Research Far From Home
I love this book. I want every first-year political science student, all graduate students, and each of my colleagues to read it. Krause and Szekely deliver the real deal: how to do rigorous field research while remaining candid, agile, and curious. In every chapter here, I laughed and I learned. -- Cynthia Enloe, author of The Big Push: Exposing and Challenging Persistent Patriarchy
Scholars seldom share their personal stories and lessons drawn from field research with others, limiting our ability to learn from one another's experiences. This book is unique in making available stories and insights from forty-four such experiences from scholars for whom fieldwork is a central part of their research. I wish it had been available when I first went to the field, and hope that young scholars today will take advantage of it, both to convince them of the importance of fieldwork and to help to prepare them for what to expect from it. -- Sidney Tarrow, coeditor of The Resistance: The Dawn of the Anti-Trump Opposition Movement
Offers a wealth of personal insights, methodological discussions, and ways of creatively coping with the unexpected during research carried out around the globe....This is a good volume for use in a methods course...Highly recommended. * Choice *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Learning Through Stories, by Peter Krause and Ora Szekely
Part I. Welcome to the Field
1. Fieldwork and Emotions, by Ian S. Lustick
2. Cooking Soup and Killing Chickens: Navigating Gender and Food-as-Fieldwork in West Africa, by Zoe Marks
3. Recite! Interpretive Fieldwork for Positivists, by Richard A. Nielsen
Part II. Designing Your Research and Deciding Where to Go
4. Fieldwork by Decree, Not by Design, by Stathis N. Kalyvas
5. Conducting 1,500 Surveys in New York City (With Great Uncertainty and a Limited Budget), by Christina M. Greer
6. Hezbollah Will Take Your Data: How to Plan for Research Among Insurgents, by Krista E. Wiegand
7. When the Linguistic Lightweight Goes Abroad: Relying on Sharp Students by Stephen M. Saideman
8. Navigating Data Collection in War Zones, by Fotini Christia
Part III. Make a Plan . . . Then Be Ready to Toss It
9. Let Go and Let Ali, by Nadya Hajj
10. Be Prepared (To Go Off Script), by Daniel N. Posner
11. Radio Gaga: Evolving Field Experiments in Mali, by Kristin Michelitch
12. Crossed Wires: Interviewing the Wrong People, by Bethany Lacina
13. “You Don’t Know What You’re Getting Into”: Dealing with Dishonesty in the Field, by Matthew Franklin Cancian and Kristin E. Fabbe
14. Successful Fieldwork for the Fieldwork-Hater, by Amelia Hoover Green
Part IV. Creatively Collecting Data and Evidence
15. How to Interview a Terrorist, by Jessica Stern
16. Stumbling Around in the Archives, by Marc Trachtenberg
17. Details in the Doodles: Documenting Covert Action, by Lindsey A. O’Rourke
18. My Stint as a Ukrainian Taxi Driver, by Keith Darden
19. Conducting Fieldwork in a Virtual Space: Exploring ISIS’s Encrypted Messaging on Telegram, by Mia Bloom and Ayse Lokmanoglu
20. All the Signs Are There: Incidental Discoveries During Fieldwork on Gender Discrimination in Russia, by Valerie Sperling
21. Learning from Foreign Colleagues, by Robert Ross
Part V. Developing Local Knowledge
22. On Field-Being, by Wendy Pearlman
23. Fieldwork on Foot, by Paul Staniland
24. The Onion Principle, by David D. Laitin
25. The Intoxication of Fieldwork: Obtaining Authorizations in Burkina Faso, by John F. McCauley
26. Field Research and Security in a Collapsed State, by Will Reno
27. Building Field Networks in the Era of Big Data, by Amaney Jamal
Part VI. Seeing and Being Seen: Identity in the Field
28. Researching an Old Civil War Close to Home, by Laia Balcells
29. Positionality and Subjectivity in Field Research, by Enze Han
30. Race and the Study of a Racial Democracy, by Melissa Nobles
31. “Why Are You Interested in That?” Studying Racial Inequality in the United States from the Outside, by Desmond King
32. Navigating Born and Chosen Identities in Fieldwork, by Peter Krause
Part VII. Being Ethically Accountable
33. On Research That “Matters,” by Erica Chenoweth
34. The Field Is Everywhere, by Zachariah Cherian Mampilly
35. Things Change: Protecting Yourself and Your Sources in Uncertain Times, by Marc Lynch
36. Ethnography with Extremists: Living in a Fascist Militia, by Alessandro Orsini
37. Building Trust with Ex-Insurgents, by Emil Aslan Souleimanov
38. On Being Seen, by Ora Szekely
Part VIII. Staying Safe and Healthy
39. Conducting Safe Fieldwork on Violence and Peace, by Sarah Zukerman Daly
40. Your Safety and Theirs: Interviewing Sex-Traffickers, by Carla B. Abdo-Katsipis
41. Shingles on the Campaign Trail, by Ravi Perry
42. Drink the Tea, by Vipin Narang
One Last Thing Before You Go . . .
Conclusion: What Does It Mean to Do Fieldwork?, by Peter Krause and Ora Szekely
Index

Stories from the Field A Guide to Navigating

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    A Hardback by Peter Krause, Ora Szekely

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      View other formats and editions of Stories from the Field A Guide to Navigating by Peter Krause

      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 30/06/2020
      ISBN13: 9780231193009, 978-0231193009
      ISBN10: 0231193009

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Stories from the Field is a relatable, thoughtful, and unorthodox guide to field research in political science. It features personal stories from working political scientists: some funny, some dramatic, all fascinating and informative.

      Trade Review
      The breadth of life experience captured in this collection is the reason this volume has great pedagogical potential. A lot of graduate students will flip to find their academic heroes and crushes and then keep reading. Authors are writing with different agendas, but always in a first-person voice. The effect is to give the volume both intellectual heft and a personal touch. -- Jesse Driscoll, author of Doing Global Fieldwork: A Social Scientist’s Guide to Mixed-Methods Research Far From Home
      I love this book. I want every first-year political science student, all graduate students, and each of my colleagues to read it. Krause and Szekely deliver the real deal: how to do rigorous field research while remaining candid, agile, and curious. In every chapter here, I laughed and I learned. -- Cynthia Enloe, author of The Big Push: Exposing and Challenging Persistent Patriarchy
      Scholars seldom share their personal stories and lessons drawn from field research with others, limiting our ability to learn from one another's experiences. This book is unique in making available stories and insights from forty-four such experiences from scholars for whom fieldwork is a central part of their research. I wish it had been available when I first went to the field, and hope that young scholars today will take advantage of it, both to convince them of the importance of fieldwork and to help to prepare them for what to expect from it. -- Sidney Tarrow, coeditor of The Resistance: The Dawn of the Anti-Trump Opposition Movement
      Offers a wealth of personal insights, methodological discussions, and ways of creatively coping with the unexpected during research carried out around the globe....This is a good volume for use in a methods course...Highly recommended. * Choice *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments
      Introduction: Learning Through Stories, by Peter Krause and Ora Szekely
      Part I. Welcome to the Field
      1. Fieldwork and Emotions, by Ian S. Lustick
      2. Cooking Soup and Killing Chickens: Navigating Gender and Food-as-Fieldwork in West Africa, by Zoe Marks
      3. Recite! Interpretive Fieldwork for Positivists, by Richard A. Nielsen
      Part II. Designing Your Research and Deciding Where to Go
      4. Fieldwork by Decree, Not by Design, by Stathis N. Kalyvas
      5. Conducting 1,500 Surveys in New York City (With Great Uncertainty and a Limited Budget), by Christina M. Greer
      6. Hezbollah Will Take Your Data: How to Plan for Research Among Insurgents, by Krista E. Wiegand
      7. When the Linguistic Lightweight Goes Abroad: Relying on Sharp Students by Stephen M. Saideman
      8. Navigating Data Collection in War Zones, by Fotini Christia
      Part III. Make a Plan . . . Then Be Ready to Toss It
      9. Let Go and Let Ali, by Nadya Hajj
      10. Be Prepared (To Go Off Script), by Daniel N. Posner
      11. Radio Gaga: Evolving Field Experiments in Mali, by Kristin Michelitch
      12. Crossed Wires: Interviewing the Wrong People, by Bethany Lacina
      13. “You Don’t Know What You’re Getting Into”: Dealing with Dishonesty in the Field, by Matthew Franklin Cancian and Kristin E. Fabbe
      14. Successful Fieldwork for the Fieldwork-Hater, by Amelia Hoover Green
      Part IV. Creatively Collecting Data and Evidence
      15. How to Interview a Terrorist, by Jessica Stern
      16. Stumbling Around in the Archives, by Marc Trachtenberg
      17. Details in the Doodles: Documenting Covert Action, by Lindsey A. O’Rourke
      18. My Stint as a Ukrainian Taxi Driver, by Keith Darden
      19. Conducting Fieldwork in a Virtual Space: Exploring ISIS’s Encrypted Messaging on Telegram, by Mia Bloom and Ayse Lokmanoglu
      20. All the Signs Are There: Incidental Discoveries During Fieldwork on Gender Discrimination in Russia, by Valerie Sperling
      21. Learning from Foreign Colleagues, by Robert Ross
      Part V. Developing Local Knowledge
      22. On Field-Being, by Wendy Pearlman
      23. Fieldwork on Foot, by Paul Staniland
      24. The Onion Principle, by David D. Laitin
      25. The Intoxication of Fieldwork: Obtaining Authorizations in Burkina Faso, by John F. McCauley
      26. Field Research and Security in a Collapsed State, by Will Reno
      27. Building Field Networks in the Era of Big Data, by Amaney Jamal
      Part VI. Seeing and Being Seen: Identity in the Field
      28. Researching an Old Civil War Close to Home, by Laia Balcells
      29. Positionality and Subjectivity in Field Research, by Enze Han
      30. Race and the Study of a Racial Democracy, by Melissa Nobles
      31. “Why Are You Interested in That?” Studying Racial Inequality in the United States from the Outside, by Desmond King
      32. Navigating Born and Chosen Identities in Fieldwork, by Peter Krause
      Part VII. Being Ethically Accountable
      33. On Research That “Matters,” by Erica Chenoweth
      34. The Field Is Everywhere, by Zachariah Cherian Mampilly
      35. Things Change: Protecting Yourself and Your Sources in Uncertain Times, by Marc Lynch
      36. Ethnography with Extremists: Living in a Fascist Militia, by Alessandro Orsini
      37. Building Trust with Ex-Insurgents, by Emil Aslan Souleimanov
      38. On Being Seen, by Ora Szekely
      Part VIII. Staying Safe and Healthy
      39. Conducting Safe Fieldwork on Violence and Peace, by Sarah Zukerman Daly
      40. Your Safety and Theirs: Interviewing Sex-Traffickers, by Carla B. Abdo-Katsipis
      41. Shingles on the Campaign Trail, by Ravi Perry
      42. Drink the Tea, by Vipin Narang
      One Last Thing Before You Go . . .
      Conclusion: What Does It Mean to Do Fieldwork?, by Peter Krause and Ora Szekely
      Index

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